P.E.I. police agencies want officers and mental health professionals responding to calls together - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. police agencies want officers and mental health professionals responding to calls together

Police agencies in Prince Edward Island would like to see clinicians and officers respond to mental health-related calls together.

Officers across the Island responding to more mental health-related calls each year

A woman comforts a person in distress.
The limited scope and hours of the P.E.I.'s mobile mental health units mean law enforcement officers are still the primary point of contact for a person in crisis, police representatives told MLAs Thursday. (Chanintorn.v/Shutterstock)

Police agencies in Prince Edward Island would like to see clinicians and officers respond to mental health-related calls together.

Representatives from three P.E.I. police forces made a presentationto a legislative standing committee Thursday about how calls about mental health crises are intersecting with their activities.

The meeting comes on the heels of the release of anOmbudsPEI report Tuesdayon the operation of the province's mobile mental health units.

Police are not currently embedded with the units, and managers told MLAson Thursday why they think that's a problem.

"We are of the opinion that mental health crisis situations are too volatile to be sending clinicians without overwatch by an armed police officer," said P.E.I. RCMP Sgt. Shaun Coady.

"There are numerous scenarios to demonstrate that, where mental health clinicians have been harmed or even killed in the field."

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Charlottetown and Summerside police, as well as RCMP, say they'd like to see the provincial government have mental health workers check in on people who repeatedly call 911 in a mental health crisis. Police say those frequent callers getting follow-ups from trained professionals would both address their needs and reduce stress on the 911 system.

The police representatives said the limited scope and hours of the mobile units mean that front-line officers, dispatched after a 911 call or a requestmade directly to a police force, are still the primary point of contact for a person in crisis.

Mobile units 'playing catch-up'

Mental health-related calls to police are increasing in all jurisdictions, MLAs learned Wednesday:

  • RCMP officers onP.E.I.have conducted 664 wellness checks already this year, compared to 618 in total last year.
  • Charlottetown police officers did1,052 wellness checks between Jan. 1 and Sept. 18 this year. In 2023, they conducted 740 all year.

Sean Coombs, Charlottetown's deputy police chief, said the mobile mental health units set up by the province and run byMedavie were able to respond to only a handful of those calls.

"They're in a position where they will only go to particular calls as we're going to all of them. They'll always be playing catch-up," he said. "A lot of times, the crisis has happened and what was done was done before they get there."

P.E.I. RCMP Sgt. Shaun Coady
P.E.I. RCMP Sgt. Shaun Coady says he's been studying how police forces and crisis units work together in other jurisdictions. (Tony Davis/CBC)

The way the system is currently designed, police get dispatched to mental health calls quickly, while the mobile unit will sometimes arrive hours later, after the situation has already been de-escalated.

Coady has been researching how police and crisis teams have been working together in other provinces.

"They seem to be having significant success in diverting people from entering the system. And so [the] probability that that would reduce the cyclical calls for service is very strong," he said."But again, without experiencing it, it's difficult to gauge."

Back in 2019, police services recommended they be part of a P.E.I. mental health unit dispatch protocol, but Coady told MLAs on Thursday that didn't happen due to what he referred to as social pressures.

With files from Nicola MacLeod